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Growing spring bulbs

By Adam Pasco on 16/03/2009 14:24:55

I love daffodils. To get the best from these wonderful flowers, I plant up a dozen plastic aquatic baskets with spring bulbs in autumn, choosing varieties that flower at different times. When spring arrives, I pop one basket after another


My five favourite dahlias

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/09/2010 12:13:20

I love early September: the sun is still hot but the nights are not stifling. The majority of plants have flowered and faded away but there are still some, particularly the dahlias, that are flowering their little heads off. There was a time when


In the pink

By Adam Pasco on 01/08/2007 10:58:02

changing from pink to blue...a clear illustration of the affect of pH on plants.My garden soil must have got more alkaline, possibly through watering with 'hard' tap water during hot weather last summer, hence the pink flowers this year. I'll need to change


Nectaroscordum of the gods

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/05/2009 18:04:09

A few weeks ago I wrote about the redesign of part of my garden. It's going well — thank you for asking. One of the plants I mentioned was Nectaroscordum siculum, which I think merits a blog of its own, as it's one of my very favourite plants


Growing fragrant sweet peas

By Adam Pasco on 08/08/2011 13:02:27

year when I got really obsessed trying to grow the very best sweet peas – just like the show growers. To produce flowers with really long straight stems you need to grow plants as single stemmed cordons. Each plant is only allowed to produce one shoot


Planting bulbs in lawns

By Adam Pasco on 31/10/2011 16:22:20

When visiting large gardens during spring, I always admire the drifts of dwarf flowering bulbs growing up through wide expanses of grass. Catch them when flowers are at their best and they look magnificent. They could be snowdrops or crocus, dainty


Memorial rose

By Adam Pasco on 18/10/2010 14:37:46

The rose is our most popular flower, and rightly so. A single rose bud captures perfection, slowly opening to celebrate nature at its very best.And as well as being a thing of beauty, roses are the perfect plant to grow as a celebration of life


Verbena bonariensis

By Adam Pasco on 09/08/2010 11:33:38

Will our love affair with Verbena bonariensis ever wane? This fabulous flower looks as good growing individually among low border plants as it does planted en masse. The open, airy quality of the stems only adds to the appeal. Wildlife loves V


Saving foxglove seeds

By Kate Bradbury on 02/07/2010 17:01:47

out of its comfortable pot into some frozen snow-covered ground, but this was a ceremonial planting, which (I hoped) would symbolise the success and glory of my new garden.In March it started to produce lots of healthy foliage and a flower spike


Planting snowdrops

By Pippa Greenwood on 09/04/2009 16:37:20

Should snowdrops be planted in spring in-the-green (after the flowers have died down but when their foliage is still green and lush) or as dry bulbs in autumn? It's a question that divides opinion in even the most prestigious horticultural circles


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